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Name:
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MartiniMan
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Subject:
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WH supports my views on oil spill
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Date:
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8/4/2010 12:35:05 PM
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This is not BP propaganda but comes directly from the Messiah's administration. Kind of supports my view about the long-term impact of the spill although who would have thought long-term might end being so short? Still a lot of work to do but more reasons to be optimistic. Maybe if the government media will get this message out to the public people will once again flock to the Gulf Coast beaches. By the way, my client is having a fabulous time at Orange Beach. No oil to speak of, swimming is allowed and unfortunately because of all the slanted press coverage the restaurants are not full. The U.S. government will release a report
that says scientists had determined that containment, burning, and
skimming measures worked in dealing with the oil spill, said Carol Browner, energy and climate change adviser to President Barack Obama.
"The good news is that the vast majority of
the oil appears to be gone," she said on ABC's "Good Morning America"
show. "That's what the initial assessment of our scientists is telling
us."
The scientists said about 25 percent of the
oil had not been captured or evaporated and there still would be some
tarballs washing up onshore but the government would make sure those
were cleaned up as quickly as possible, Browner said.
"We do feel like this is an important turning point," she said.
Browner's comments came as BP said it had
reached "a significant milestone" in its effort to permanently plug the
well, which has spewed millions of barrels of crude into the Gulf of Mexico. Crews pumped heavy drilling mud into the well and now will try to seal it with cement.
The New York Times said the government
report was expected to say that what is left of the oil is so diluted
that it does not seem to pose much additional risk.
Most is light sheen at the surface or
dispersed below the surface and federal scientists believe it is
breaking down rapidly, the newspaper reported.
The report on the spill, by federal scientists with outside help, is the result of an effort to determine the total volume of oil
released and to figure out where it went, the Times said. The National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration was the lead agency on the
report, the newspaper said.
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